Pac-10 Conference set to start its own TV network

FILE - This Oct. 21, 2010, file photo shows Pac-10 commissioner Larry Scott announcing the splitting of NCAA college football divisions during a news conference in San Francisco. The Pac-10 agreed to a 12-year television contract with Fox and ESPN on Tuesday, May 3, 2011, that will more than triple its media rights fees and be the most valuable for any conference in college sports. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

FILE - This June 11, 2010, file photo shows Pac-10 Commissioner Larry Scott, front left, interacting with University of Colorado President Bruce Benson, second from left, during ceremonies at the university in Boulder, Colo., where the University of Colorado joined the Pac-10. They are surrounded by members of the Board of Regents and other school officials. The Pac-10 agreed to a 12-year television contract with Fox and ESPN on Tuesday, May 3, 2011, that will more than triple its media rights fees and be the most valuable for any conference in college sports. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)

PHOENIX — Larry Scott has spent his nearly two years as Pac-10 commissioner bolstering the conference’s brand by expanding its reach.

The former professional tennis player unfurled his latest and greatest ground stroke on Wednesday, announcing the launch of the conference’s own television network and a joint 12-year deal with ESPN and Fox that’s the richest in college sports at a hefty $3 billion.

“I think it’s fair to say 18 months ago, never in our wildest dreams would we have envisioned being in the position that we’re in today,” Arizona State athletic director Lisa Love said.

Member schools had already agreed to an equal revenue-sharing plan and will rake it in with the new network and TV deal, each earning about $21 million annually in guaranteed money.

The roughly $250 million per year for the conference puts the new Pac-12 — Colorado and Utah are set to join the next two years — ahead of the Big Ten ($220 million) and SEC ($205 million) for top dog in TV deals.

For a conference that made less than $60 million in media rights this past season, that’s a big deal.

“Today’s announcement of this landmark agreement represents an important milestone in the transformation from the Pac-10 to the Pac-12,” Scott said. “The increased revenue that will come to the Pac-12 comes at a critically important time for our universities given the unprecedented financial challenges that higher education and athletics within higher education is facing.”

The TV contract, which will begin with the 2012-13 season, combined with the Pac-12 Network will allow the conference to televise every football and men’s basketball game, numerous women’s basketball games, along with Olympic and other non-revenue sports within the conference.

Normally rivals in sports coverage, ESPN — and partner ABC — and Fox will combine to broadcast 44 regular-season football games, including 10 to a national audience, and 68 men’s basketball games.

The Pac-12 championship game in football will be televised next season by Fox, which will also utilize its FX channel in its coverage, and alternate every year between the two networks. The men’s conference basketball tournament will have a similar rotation, starting with ESPN next season.

“We do compete at a lot of levels, often like they do on Saturdays in college football, but there are a lot of times when it makes sense to get together,” said Randy Freer, president of Fox Sports Networks. “We were able to come together and realize this could be a relationship where everyone truly won. The sum of the parts were bigger than the whole in this case.”

The Pac-12 Network will be fully owned by the conference, unlike the Big Ten Network, 49 percent of which is owned by Fox.

Along with the Pac-12 Digital Network, the Pac-12 Network will televise some football games and the bulk of men’s basketball games, roughly 120 per season. It also will show numerous women’s basketball games and another 200 live Olympic sports, which the conference has dominated in over the years.

“It’s been said if the Pacific-12 Conference were a country, we’d be top-10 in the world as a country at the Olympics,” Love said. “It’s a remarkable conference, but because we haven’t been as exposed, by and large unless you’re here, you don’t know about it. It’s our opportunity now to share the good news in that regard.”

The conference also created the Pac-12 Media Enterprises to manage and sell sponsorship and licensing rights controlled by the conference, along with the football championship game and men’s and women’s basketball conference tournaments.